Posted by Jeanne Devon on February 6, 2013 · 29 Comments
We last left Bill Fulton working undercover for the FBI. After he was asked to make contact with militia leader Schaeffer Cox, now convicted on weapons charges and conspiracy to commit murder, Fulton recalled a disturbing meeting. He was in Fairbanks, attending a sale and fundraising event hosted by his own Anchorage military supply store and security company Drop Zone, and held at Far North Tactical, a similar store in Fairbanks, owned by his friend Aaron Bennett who had his own militia group in the area. Fulton’s initial conversation with Cox led him to believe that Cox had “gone crazy.”…
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Posted by Jeanne Devon on January 18, 2013 · 33 Comments
Bill Fulton, one of two undercover FBI informants in the recent Alaska Militia Trial I covered, continued his in-depth interview with me. After recounting the circumstances of his association with US Senate candidate Joe Miller, and the controversial arrest of a local reporter by his security company at a Miller campaign event (while working undercover), we were ready to begin talking about the Cox investigation and the trial. This portion of the interview discusses how Fulton began his company Drop Zone, his association with the FBI, and the beginning of the investigation of Cox, and other members of the militia….
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Category Alaska, Headlines, Law & Order, Public Safety, Schaeffer Cox Trial, Veterans · Tags Alaska militia trial, Army CID, Bill Fulton, common law trial, Denny's trial, Drop Zone Anchorage, Far North Tactical, FBI, FBI informant, IACC, Joe Miller, Liberty Bell Network, Lonnie Vernon trial, Schaeffer Cox trial, Second amendment task force, sovereign citizens, US Army
Posted by Jeanne Devon on January 14, 2013 · 48 Comments
Bill Fulton, undercover FBI informant in the “Alaska Militia Trial,” gave a lengthy interview to The Mudflats about his role in the case, and his controversial life in Anchorage before it was revealed. In this article, he shares his candid opinion about local Anchorage media, national progressive media, Joe Miller, and what they got wrong. Yours truly didn’t even escape entirely unscathed. Bill Fulton came to Alaska, the biggest small town in the world, and became instantly “known.” He owned a shop in Anchorage that was utterly unforgettable. A military supply store, which doubled as offices for a security company,…
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Category Alaska, Barack Obama, Headlines, Joe Miller, Lisa Murkowski, Mitt Romney, Public Safety, Republicans, Rural Issues, Sarah Palin, Schaeffer Cox Trial, Veterans · Tags 241 militia trial, Alaska Dispatch, Alaska militia, Anchorage Daily News, Bill Fulton, Drop Zone, Drop Zone Bill, Drop Zone security, FBI informant, KTUU, Mudflats, Schaeffer Cox, Tony Hopfinger
Posted by Jeanne Devon on January 8, 2013 · 26 Comments
“Well, this proves one thing. Schaeffer Cox can still draw a crowd.” Reporter Michael Carey made the observation while sitting next to me on a wooden bench in the lobby outside Courtroom 2 in the federal courthouse in Anchorage this morning. It’s true. At the end of the day, Cox will be sentenced to 25 years, 10 months in prison, and his new lawyer will reveal the results of a recent psychological evaluation that diagnoses him for the first time as a paranoid schizophrenic, with paranoid personality disorder, and delusional personality disorder. But as the day begins, the courtroom is…
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Category Alaska, Headlines, Law & Order, Nation, Public Safety, Schaeffer Cox Trial · Tags 241 militia trial, Alaska militia trial, Alaska peacemakers militia, Coleman Barney, Fairbanks militia, Judge Robert Bryan, Lonnie Vernon, Peter Camiel, Schaeffer Cox, Schaeffer Cox sentencing, Second amendment task force
Posted by Jeanne Devon on January 7, 2013 · 25 Comments
Today is the sentencing for the Salcha couple accused of conspiring to murder a judge and his family, and IRS agents as they anticipated seizure of their home due to a tax dispute. Lonnie Vernon is also being sentenced for his role in the “2-4-1 Militia trial” with co-defendants militia leader Schaeffer Cox, and militia Major Coleman Barney. Lonnie Vernon plead guilty of conspiring to murder the judge in exchange for the dismissal of many of the charges against him. Of all the characters in this tale, Lonnie Vernon is the most volatile and angry, and Karen Vernon is the…
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Category Headlines, Schaeffer Cox Trial, You can't make this stuff up. · Tags 241 militia trial, Alaska militia trial, Alaska peacemakers militia, Coleman Barney, Fairbanks militia trial, Karen Vernon, Lonnie Vernon, Schaeffer Cox, sovereign citizen, Vernon sentencing
Posted by Jeanne Devon on January 5, 2013 · 8 Comments
Federal prosecutors have asked that Judge Robert Bryan sentence convicted militia leader Schaeffer Cox of Fairbanks, to 35 years in prison. Cox, a 28-year old father of two who founded the Alaska Peacemakers Militia, would be 63 years old when released if prosecutors get their way. Unhappy with his representation during the trial, Cox fired his sometimes lackluster attorney, Nelson Traverso, soon after the conviction. His new Seattle-based attorney, Peter Camiel, has indicated that he will ask for a sentence of 10 years for his client. Cox has already served almost two years in prison since his arrest on March…
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Posted by Jeanne Devon on September 25, 2012 · 11 Comments
Another day in court that brings us closer to the end of the Fairbanks militia trial. Today saw the sentencing of militia Major Coleman Barney, and also a status conference with Lonnie and Karen Vernon that left more questions than answers. For those wanting to cut to the chase, Coleman Barney was sentenced to five years in prison, half the time of the ten year sentence the prosecution was seeking, but hardly the house arrest, or time served sought by the defense. How they arrived at the sentence was fascinating, though, and all the details are below. LONNIE AND KAREN…
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Posted by Jeanne Devon on August 25, 2012 · 6 Comments
Lonnie Vernon, one of three defendants in the recent 2-4-1 militia trial, and his wife Karen, are currently charged with an alleged plot to murder a federal judge overseeing a tax case against the couple. According to court documents filed on Thursday, they will be changing their pleas on Monday in U.S. District Court. Of the eight counts against them, it is unclear which plea(s) they will change. There were eight counts filed against Lonnie Vernon including charges of conspiracy to murder federal officials, threatening to murder family members of a federal judge, conspiracy to possess an unregistered firearm and…
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Posted by Jeanne Devon on July 9, 2012 · 25 Comments
Schaeffer Cox, who was recently found guilty in federal court on multiple counts including conspiracy to commit murder, solicitation to commit a crime of violence, and various weapons charges, has fired his attorney Nelson Traverso. In papers filed today, Traverso moved to withdraw from the case since Cox has discharged him from representation. “Mr. Cox is extremely dissatisfied with counsel’s representation and expressly requests that any further attorney-client representation be terminated,” Traverso said in his motion to withdraw from the case. He has been Cox’s attorney since March 23, 2011. Cox, who is currently being held at the Anchorage Correctional…
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Posted by Jeanne Devon on June 23, 2012 · 2 Comments
~Coleman Barney (L) and Schaeffer Cox (R) in Fairbanks last year Twenty verdicts were handed down by the jury last week in the Alaska Peacemakers Militia Trial against defendants Schaeffer Cox, Coleman Barney, and Lonnie Vernon. But on the twenty first charge, the jury was deadlocked. Cox and Barney took the stand in their own defense during the trial. Barney was widely regarded to have been a strong witness. Cox and Vernon were found guilty on conspiracy to commit murder which potentially carries with it a life sentence. But they could not reach a verdict concerning the third defendant…
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